Legolas was already spotted, I just have not confronted him yet. He carries a bow around town sometimes, looks like he comes from the Faroe islands. He is not gay, he just has a pure heart and is the way his people are.

This is not hollywood stuff. This is the vision of the truth that is free from the constraints of time.

Tolkien was told as a child this vision of the truth, in Africa by a shaman. Later in Tolkien's life, he saw with his own eyes how the world is controlled and by whom, and he retold the vision the African shaman told him, adding in the real characters, because he learned the truth not just from a story, but from seeing it in the documents he uncovered while working as a spy.

Tolkien comes from a family who had served under mine as an ambassador. Interesting how thru time itself, this family continues to serve faithfully. They were wisely chosen by my ancestors.

British Army officer. The inscription reads: “Hugh Foulkes, Esq., Lieutenant in the Royal Cheshire Militia, died Febr. 2nd. 1799, aged 26 years.” Lieutenant Foulkes is of interest because he is the subject of the song “Cathedral”, which appears on Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “CSN” album of 1977. Graham Nash driving from London to Stonehenge, when he paused at Winchester Cathedral.

Later, Graham explained in an interview: “I was once walking down the central aisle of Winchester Cathedral and felt a presence at my feet. I happened to be standing on the grave of Hugh Foulkes, a soldier who died in 1799 on the same day that I was born. I find that most wars are fought in the name of God. You know, my God’s better than your God and I’ll kill you to prove it”.

British Army officer. The inscription reads: “Hugh Foulkes, Esq., Lieutenant in the Royal Cheshire Militia, died Febr. 2nd. 1799, aged 26 years.” Lieutenant Foulkes is of interest because he is the subject of the song “Cathedral”, which appears on Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “CSN” album of 1977. Graham Nash driving from London to Stonehenge, when he paused at Winchester Cathedral.

Later, Graham explained in an interview: “I was once walking down the central aisle of Winchester Cathedral and felt a presence at my feet. I happened to be standing on the grave of Hugh Foulkes, a soldier who died in 1799 on the same day that I was born. I find that most wars are fought in the name of God. You know, my God’s better than your God and I’ll kill you to prove it”.